4.5 Article

Work related asthma. A causal analysis controlling the healthy worker effect

Journal

OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 70, Issue 9, Pages 603-610

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/oemed-2013-101362

Keywords

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Funding

  1. French Agency of health safety, environment and work [AFSSET-EST-09-15]
  2. Hospital programme of clinical research (PHRC)-Paris
  3. National Research Agency-Health environment, health-work programme
  4. National Research Agency [ANR-2010-PRSP-003]
  5. Merck Sharp Dohme (MSD)
  6. Isere committee against respiratory diseases (COMARES)
  7. French Ministry of foreign and European affairs/Netherland organisation for scientific research (NWO) Van Gogh programme for French Dutch cooperation
  8. University Paris Sud [11-ED420]

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Objectives The healthy worker effect usually leads to underestimation of the association between occupational exposure and asthma. The role of irritants in work-related asthma is disputed. We estimated the effect of occupational exposure on asthma expression in a longitudinal study, using marginal structural modelling to control for the healthy worker effect. Methods Analyses included 1284 participants (17-79years, 48% men) from the follow-up (2003-2007) of the French Epidemiological study on the Genetics and Environment of Asthma (case-control study). Age at asthma onset, periods with/without attacks over lifetime and occupational history were recorded retrospectively. Exposures to known asthmagens, irritants or low level of chemicals/allergens were evaluated through a job-exposure matrix. The job history was reconstructed into 5-year intervals. Results Thirty-one per cent of subjects had ever been exposed to occupational asthmagens. Among the 38% of subjects who had asthma (ever), presence of attacks was reported in 52% of all time periods. Using standard analyses, no association was observed between exposure to known asthmagens (OR (95% CI): 0.99 (0.72 to 1.36)) or to irritants/low level of chemicals/allergens (0.82 (0.56 to 1.20)) and asthma attacks. Using a marginal structural model, all associations increased with suggestive evidence for known asthmagens (1.26 (0.90 to 1.76)), and reaching statistical significance for irritants/low level of chemicals/allergens (1.56 (1.02 to 2.40)). Conclusions The healthy worker effect has an important impact in risk assessment in work-related asthma studies. Marginal structural models are useful to eliminate imbalances in exposure due to disease-driven selection. Results support the role of irritants in work-related asthma.

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